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Canadian woman survives 12 days in the bush

New Data Concludes Wait Times for Patients With Gastrointestinal Disease Are Increasing Across Canada

Related Content Before reappearing last week, she was last seen on July 14 on the north end of the O’Chiese First Nation reserve, according to a statement from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Rocky Mountain House, Alberta. She escaped an attack and vanished, it said, emerging 12 days later. The woman’s uncle said she suffered head and pelvic injuries and will need to undergo reconstructive surgery on her jaw. Her feet are also in bad shape as she had no shoes, he said. The woman remains hospitalized. She survived by drinking river water and eating berries, according to a report by The Canadian Press. Citing RCMP Cpl. Nick Munro, it said investigators believe that the woman was in a truck with four other people when it got stuck. Three of them went for help. When they didn’t return, the woman and a man started walking. He allegedly then hit her in the face and attempted to sexually assault her, The Canadian Press said. The woman reportedly fled and got turned around. She was eventually found by an oilfield worker on a dirt road, The Canadian Press said. He called authorities. Kevin Roy Gladue, 36, is charged with aggravated assault, sexual assault and obstructing a peace officer, the RCMP statement said.

Colonoscopies are among the medical tests for which professional fees face a cut of 10%. Pointing to new initial data gathered in April 2012 from the Canadian Association of Gastroenterology Survey of Access to GastroEnterology (SAGE), Desmond Leddin, Lead of the SAGE, says “a comparison of data from surveys performed in 2005 and 2008 shows that wait times for patients with gastrointestinal disease have increased across Canada.” “This CAG national survey information combined with the new fee structure in Ontario gives us cause for concern about patient safety,” says CAG President Dan Sadowski. “With evidence in hand that patient wait times have been increasing over the past seven years, we can’t support any government decision – in Ontario or elsewhere in Canada – that results in reduced access to, or longer wait times for, important medical procedures including colonoscopy, which can prevent and reduce cancer rates.” About 20,000 Canadians are diagnosed with colon cancer every year. Of that number, one-third will die of the disease. Notwithstanding these statistics, the CAG and OAG agree that cancer screening is a success story in Canada, and that prevention and early detection by access to colonoscopy is key to reducing the burden of the disease. The proof rests in the release of statistics on May 9 by the Canadian Cancer Society on the decline in deaths from colorectal cancer due to increased screening. “We have made important gains to reduce national rates of colorectal cancer through colonoscopy screening programs,” says Dan Sadowski. “We are concerned that the Ontario government’s decision to cut professional fees will have two bad outcomes. The first is that longer patient wait times will grow even longer due to a drop in access to cancer screening procedures. The second is that it may open the door to similar policy decisions in other regions in Canada. In both cases, it is the patient who will bear the brunt of these decisions.” Links: